Jamir Tillman, who also had a scholarship offer from Georgetown and recruiting interest from schools such as Tulsa and Duke, says Navy was a perfect fit.

“It’s the whole aspect of the Naval Academy and what it offers,” Tillman said. “Playing Division I football, being set for life (after football) and being taught by leaders.”

Tillman led Gorman in receiving last fall with 58 receptions for 958 yards and 12 touchdowns in helping the Gaels win their fourth straight state championship.

With Gorman playing several games against ranked opponents on national television, Tillman was able to shine on high school football’s biggest stage. Now, he’ll get to play in arguably the most important college football game each season — the Army-Navy game.

“That is one of America’s great traditions,” said Tillman, who is the son of former NFL wide receiver Cedric Tillman.

Tillman will join several Southern Nevadans in the Navy program, including a three Gorman graduates — offensive lineman Sam Womack (2008), defensive end Evan Palelei (2009) and defensive back Togasii Peko (2011).

Verbal commitments are non-binding until an athlete signs a letter-of-intent on national signing day, which is Feb. 6.

Gorman wide receiver Ryan Smith previously committed to New Mexico, but is still going through the process. His father DeAndre Smith left his assistant coaching position at New Mexico this week for a similar spot at Syracuse.

Ray Brewer can be reached at 990-2662 or ray.brewer@lasvegassun.com. Follow Ray on Twitter at twitter.com/raybrewer21.